Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current, December 13, 1945, Page 6, Image 6

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    6 Heppner Gazette Times, Decembc 1 3. 1945
BOARDMAN NEWS
By Mazlne Ely
' Funeral services for Thomas Eu
gene McLean, 16 months old son
of Mr. and Mrs. Robert McLean,
was held Tuesday, Dec. '4 in the
Presbyterian church with Rev. D. J.
Peterson officiating. Chloe Barlow,
Maxine Ely, Mildred and Evelyn
Miller sang two hymns and were
accompanied by La Vern Part
low. Tntermpnt was made in the
Boardman cemetery. The little boy
lrvet hie ita in tha firo that riPRtTOV-
1U AIM U V. 1" wl.
ed the Alvin Duelen home Dec. 2.
The Ladies Aid annual bazaar
was held Friday night. A chicken
dinner was served at six and there
were a fish pond and a fancy work
booth. After supper the following
- : T.--1 riimKre
program was kivch. " -
by the high school glee club a pia
no solo by Maxine Ely, vocal, solo
by Rev. D. J. Peterson and piano
solo by Shirley Peck. Following the
program the weekly show was
eld.
Ladies Aid met at the home of
held at the home of Mrs. Elvin Ely
"Mrs. Leo Root last Wednesday.
H. E. C. Christmas party was
Wednesday.
The Stanfield basketball team
came to Boardman Tuesday eve
ning Dec. 4. Boardman's first string
lost 37-38 but the second string
won 17-15.
Boardman went to Echo the fol
lown night and lost to both teams
QS-W onrl 28-27.
ivr- onfl Mrs. Clvde Tannehill,
Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Lehman, Mrs.
E. A. McFarland, Mabel Allen and
Edith Hendricks attended a grange
conference at lone Dec. 4.
Ben Byson, editor of the Grange
Bulletin, George Loving and Al
Griding of Portland spent Satur
day and Sunday at the McFarland
home. They went goose hunting on
the project.
Effie McFarland returned home
t T-fi-,vA Thursday where she
has been having dental work done.
Dr Roben Maaske, president ot
Eastern Oregon College of Educa
tion at La Grande gave a very in
teresting talk to the students and
faculty Tuesday. His subject was,
"What time is it?" Before his talk
Donald Gillispie and- Delbert Tyler
accompanied Virginia Roach, Nan
cy Rands and Delores Zroney in a
' i .v,vr nn their tonneltes.
vovai uuiiuj--"
Mrs. Jon Mulligan returned w
her home in Albany after spend
ing two weeks with her son and
family, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Mulh-
Mr and Mrs. Ronald Black and
Evelyn, Ann, Chloe Barlow and
Mary Ann Rands motored to Pen
dleton Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. H. O. Ely of Mor
gan were dinner guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Elvin Ely Sunday.
PUDDING FOR DESSERT
Show us the family that doesnt
love desserts! Most homemakers
find the weather a source of in
spiration for bringing the meal to a
happy ending. Hot summer days,
for instance, call for frozen des-serts-and
it's during the cold days
of mid-winter that puddings taste
Uoct
Desserts must receive attention
in the planning of the meal. You
have, no doubt, experienced sitting
a Vipartv main course and
ommllv substantial dessert and
hearing the resultant groans around
the table. So learn to fit dessert in
to the mood and pattern of your
meals a light dessert for a hearty
meal, 'a heavy top-off for a light
meal.
Puddings, especially the ones
served hot, are among the most
filling of all desserts. Some pud
dings are complete in themselves
but others taste best served with
a sauce. With steaming hot plum
pudding hard sauce made from
butter, powdered sugar and flavor
ing is perfect. Bread or rice pud
dings are good with cream or a
maple sauce, and plain or whipped
cream should top the cornstarch
mixtures. It's all a matter of your
own favorite combination of
flavors.
For your holiday pudding here is
a hard sauce recipe with different
flavors to suit all tastes.
HARD SAUCE
4 tbs butter, 1 cup confectioners'
sugar, 1 tsp boiling water, Few
grains, of salt
Cream butter and sugar together
thoroughly. Add boiling water, salt
and desired flavoring as listed be
low. Beat until smooth and fluffy.
Makes 7-8 cup. j
Brandy to taste.
Orange ltsp grated rind.
Ginger 4 tsp chopped preserved
ginger.
Cranberry 2 tbs unstrained
canned cranberry sauce.
Fluffy Hard Sauce Use only 2
tbs butter; fold in 1 stiffly beaten
egg white. Add vanilla or sherry
to taste.
INDIAN PUDDING
2V2 cups milk, 1-3 cup light mo
lasses 3 tbs sugar, cup yellow
corn meal, tsp salt, tsp cin
namon, 1-8 tsp nutmeg, 2 tbs
butter
Heat 2 cups milk and add re
maining ingredients; cook in double
boiler 20 minutes, stirring occa
sionally. Pour into baking dish
Continued on Pag 8th
How to keep wheels
rolling
I "HE!l BEARING i
You roll on wheels and
the wheels of your car or
truck roll on bearings. To
protect wheel bearings use long-lived, wear-reducing
RPM Wheel Bearing Grease. Ruined wheel bearings are
hard to replace these days! Keep yours in
tip-top condition by regular servicing with
RPM Wheel Bearing Grease!
fare reflections
of your affections! L
MAKE CHRISTMAS A YEAR-'BOOND PLEASURE
L. E. DICK
Phone 622
HEPPNER, OREGON
A Store Full of
Attractive Merchandise
Case Furniture Co,
I I I
We're cutting
down our waiting list... every day i
Right now, throughout the Pacific Coast, we
are installing thousands of telephones. Every
day our waiting list is being cut down.
Our rate nf nrofress in comnletinc our un
filled orders is dependent upon the receipt of
the necessary equipment from our manufac
turers who are going ahead as rapidly as pos
sible in reconverting from all-out war produc
tion to supplying our peacetime needs.
Still, it will take some time before we can.
provide service for everyone who wants it.
Where the instrument itself is all that is needed,
we are well on our way to take off the waiting
list all such unfilled applications. But there are
. many places where we will have to build com-
plicated switchboards . . . others where we will
have to put up entire new buildings.
You may be certain, though, that your tele
phone is on the way and mat we are doing
everything humanly possible to hurry the day
we bring it to you.
The Pacific Telephone and Telegraph Co.
w mini - ' " m ""lwiwl,w'w''MMnnl
West Willow Street-Telephone Heppner 5
JNUVV o o o
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-20 YEAR
RETIREMENT PLAN
... IN THE NEW . . .
UNITED STATES
ARMY
MEN 17 ru
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U. S. ARMY RECRUITING
STATION
Post Office Building, Pendleton
34
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